Exclusive: Trump denies U.S. embassy to
be moved to Jerusalem within a year
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[January 18, 2018]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President
Donald Trump denied on Wednesday that the planned relocation of the U.S.
embassy in Israel to Jerusalem would take place within a year, after
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he expected the controversial
move to happen by then.
Reversing decades of U.S. policy, Trump in early December recognized
Jerusalem as Israel’s capital and set in motion the process of moving
the embassy from Tel Aviv, imperiling Middle East peace efforts and
upsetting the Arab world and Western allies alike.
U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said last month the embassy move
was “probably no earlier than three years out, and that’s pretty
ambitious,” a timeframe that administration officials have attributed to
the logistics of finding and securing a site as well as arranging
housing for diplomats.
Jerusalem is home to sites holy to the Muslim, Jewish and Christian
religions. The Palestinians want East Jerusalem, which Israel captured
in the 1967 Arab-Israeli war and annexed in a move not recognized
internationally, as the capital of their future state.
Netanyahu, according to Israeli reporters traveling with him on a trip
to India, said on Wednesday: “My solid assessment is that it will go
much faster than you think - within a year from now.”
Asked about Netanyahu’s comment, Trump told Reuters in an interview that
was not the case. "By the end of the year? We’re talking about different
scenarios - I mean obviously that would be on a temporary basis. We’re
not really looking at that. That's no.“
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President Donald Trump smiles during an interview with Reuters at
the White House in Washington, U.S., January 17, 2018. REUTERS/Kevin
Lamarque
Trump – whose decision on the embassy move fulfilled a campaign pledge -
promised, however, that it would be a “a beautiful embassy but not one
that costs $1.2 billion,” referring to what he says was the cost of the
new U.S. embassy in London.
Trump last week canceled a trip to London to open the new diplomatic
mission, blaming his White House predecessor Barack Obama for selling
off the old one for "peanuts" in a bad deal.
He acknowledged that the embassy move in Britain was agreed under former
President George W. Bush but said it was built under Obama and “came out
tremendously over budget.”
(Reporting By Jeff Mason, Steve Holland and Roberta Rampton; Writing by
Matt Spetalnick; Editing by Alistair Bell)
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